APS March Meeting 2015
Volume 60, Number 1
Monday–Friday, March 2–6, 2015;
San Antonio, Texas
Session F46: Invited Session: DBIO Award Symposium
8:00 AM–11:00 AM,
Tuesday, March 3, 2015
Room: 217A
Sponsoring
Unit:
DBIO
Chair: Wolfgang Losert, University of Maryland
Abstract ID: BAPS.2015.MAR.F46.3
Abstract: F46.00003 : Dynamics of living matter: can we ``see'' collective motions in proteins?
9:12 AM–9:48 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Doeke Hekstra
(Green Center for Systems Biology, UT Southwestern Medical Center)
Proteins are ideal model systems for quantitative study of the interplay of
physical and evolutionary forces. Collective, anharmonic motions of amino
acid residues within proteins are thought to be central to their function,
and to explain, in large part, the complex dependence of protein function on
its constituent parts. Currently, the experimental characterization of such
motions poses a major stumbling block on the way to a physical understanding
of protein function and evolution. We are addressing this problem in two
ways.
First, alternate conformations of protein residues can often be
distinguished in the electron density estimated from room-temperature X-ray
crystallography. The dense packing of residues in the folded protein
requires that such conformational variations must propagate through networks
of amino acids to preclude local steric clashes. Fraser and
colleagues\footnote{Van den Bedem, H., Bhabha, G., Yang, K., Wright, P. E. {\&} Fraser, J.
S., \textit{Nat. Methods} \textbf{10,} 896--902 (2013).} showed that such steric conflicts can be used to
extract contact networks of residues collectively switching conformation. We
ask if these networks are conserved over homologous sequences and connected
to the functional reaction coordinate, both of which would demonstrate their
fundamental importance. I will describe initial results for the family of
PDZ domains: small ligand-binding proteins for which a network of
energetically and conformationally coupled residues controlling ligand
affinity has been demonstrated previously by a range of methods.
Second, the analysis of collective motions in proteins, by nearly any means,
is indirect: nothing is seen moving. To directly induce and ``see'' motions on
a range of time scales, we developed a new approach based on (a) electric
field pulses to induce motions within a protein crystal and (b)
time-resolved crystallography to observe these motions. Since proteins
generically have a heterogeneous, modifiable charge distribution, this
method could provide a powerful, general way of probing the collective
motions, and excited states, of proteins in kinetic and atomic detail. I
will present initial experiments showing the method is feasible.
Taken together, these experiments begin to provide a basis for the
development of a physical theory of proteins consistent with their function
and adaptation -- the source of their survival throughout the evolutionary
process.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2015.MAR.F46.3